Pubdate: Thu, 08 Nov 2012 Source: Napanee Guide (CN ON) Copyright: 2012 OSPREY Media Group Inc. Contact: http://www.napaneeguide.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3980 Author: Meghan Balogh MEDICAL MARIJUANA MAY BE GROWN LOCALLY Stone Mills Township could soon be the home of a groundbreaking facility that will produce medicinal cannabis (marijuana), for consumption by approved patients in Canada. ABcann Medicinals, the company behind the project, anticipates that a large-scale medical marijuana production facility will be a big step toward better meeting the needs of an estimated 2.1 million approved users across the country. ABcann chief executive officer Ken Clement says that the company is proceeding with plans for a Stone Mills facility, pending a permit to operate from Health Canada. The company is also pursuing the establishment of another facility in the municipality of Big Quill, Sask. "I would say that unless someone else comes along, Stone Mills will be the first in Canada," said Clement in a phone interview Monday, stating a facility in the municipality is currently in the preliminary stages. "We're working with Hydro One and have a couple pieces of property in mind in the Stone Mills area. We have to determine what site is going to give us enough access to power for the long-term." He says that solar energy in the region was one deciding factor in the selection of the Tamworth area as a site. He also says that the provincial government has been very receptive to the company's proposal. "We were going to build in British Columbia first, because (our doctor), Dr. Iain Cleator, is based here. But the way the Ontario levels of government have accepted us, and just because of the job creation around what we are doing, they're being very helpful." The planned facility will be a source of local employment, and create full- and part-time positions in the areas of administration, nursing, compliance, security, growing, processing and shipping, with an estimated payroll near $1.9 million per year, according to a press release from the company. There will also be employment opportunities as construction for the facility gets underway. "We're anticipating close to 100 jobs created between construction and also a call centre," said Clement. ABcann is working under guidelines set by Health Canada. "We have been told by Health Canada that by December there will be a next round of documents that guide us, in terms of the overall designs of the facility." With proposed changes to Health Canada's medical marijuana program, Clement says the facility in Stone Mills will fit well with the government's mandate to provide medical cannabis, through physicians, to increasing numbers of approved patients in the country. "I think more and more Canadians are looking at alternative medicine. I think cannabis has been used for thousands of years in medicine, and is something more natural. "The current Minister of Health (Leona Aglukkaq) has stated that the current system is coming to an end. We're trying to take it to a different level with quality control, product testing, all the factors that are not there in the existing program." According to the company's press release, the company "is committed to being a long-term market player, which will result in requiring a high technical skill level within the employee base." Clement says ABcann is aiming for a spring 2013 groundbreaking, and is hoping that the facility will be built and operating by later on that year or early 2014. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom